In this drug case, two warrants issued for search of premises occupied by the defendant Shea, one for his business offices at 45 Court Street, Plymouth, the other for his residence at 169 Rocky Hill Road, Plymouth. Executing the warrant in connection with the business premises, the police found on the defendant’s person a brown vial containing 0.28 gram of 76% pure cocaine. When he was informed of the second warrant, the defendant said the stash the police were looking for could be found at his residence, and, in fact, search there under the warrant, with the defendant assisting, recovered nine one-eighth ounce bags of cocaine at 37% strength, a total weight of 30.9 grams, and, in addition, two small quantities of marihuana and sundry cocaine paraphernalia. 1 A motion to suppress all the evidence was denied by a judge of the Superior Court after hearing. At a nonjury trial, the defendant was convicted of trafficking in cocaine of a weight in excess of 28 but less than 100 grams, possession of cocaine, and possession of marihuana. The defendant was sentenced for the trafficking; the indictments for possession of cocaine and marihuana were placed on file with the defendant’s consent.
Upon the present appeal, the defendant attacks the negative ruling on the pretrial motion to suppress and also claims that there were errors at trial.
1. Motion to suppress, (a) Sufficiency of affidavit supporting the warrants. Officer William E. Curtis of the Plymouth police, the affiant, describes his considerable experience in various investigations and prosecutions. In mid-December, 1985, he talked with an unnamed “reliable informant” who had furnished information that had “led to convictions in the past in Plymouth District Court.” The informant said he 2 had been told that the defendant was selling cocaine from his residence on Rocky Hill Road and from his “tanning salon” on Court Street; also he (the informant) had seen cocaine *30 several times in the last few months in the possession of “different subjects” who claimed to have purchased it from Shea either at his house or place of business. About January 24, 1986, Curtis had a further conversation with this informant. He said he had been present at Shea’s business on at least two occasions in the last month: he saw Shea sell cocaine in his office in the tanning salon and again from a locked desk drawer in the downstairs office of “Corinthian Pools,” also owned by Shea and located at the same address. Curtis added that since mid-January, 1986, he had conducted a “loose surveillance” of the tanning salon and had observed three subjects entering and leaving the building whom he believed to be involved in the use of narcotics, and who were being actively investigated by the police department.
About February 2, 1986, Sergeant Pomeroy of the Plymouth police told Curtis he had just spoken with a “reliable informant whose information has led to convictions in court in the past” (a second informant) and that person told him that he had been present at Shea’s residence within the past three days and observed cocaine being sold there.
Concluding the affidavit, Curtis states that about February 4, 1986, he talked with the first informant who said he 3 had just spoken with Shea, and Shea said he would be picking up a quantity of cocaine later in the week and would have a supply on hand for the coming weekend.
The warrants issued on February 5, 1986, a Wednesday, and were executed on Saturday, February 8.
We exámine the affidavit under the regime of
Commonwealth
v.
Upton,
As to the “veracity” requirement, there are averments regarding the informants that they have supplied information which has led to past convictions.
4
*In
Commonwealth
v.
Malone,
The defendant has gone on to attack both warrants as overbroad or indefinite, and executed unlawfully in the nighttime, but these contentions fail, as does the claim that the warrants were “stale” (in that connection, note especially the February 4 conversation).
(b) Neutrality of the magistrate. The defendant argues that, even if the affidavit established probable cause, the warrants were invalidated because the magistrate who issued them must be taken to have been fatally biased, or lacking impartiality.
John A. Sullivan, an assistant clerk-magistrate, had issued the warrants on February 5. He was available after his regular working hours on February 8 to act on bail applications, and when the defendant, under arrest, was brought into the police station that evening, he released him on personal recognizance. Sullivan was paid no separate fee for issuing the warrants; that function fell within his usual duties as assistant clerk, for which he received a stated annual salary of $34,000. For setting bail after hours he receives $15 in accordance with G. L. c. 262, § 24. 8 By arrangement, Sullivan and a colleague act on bail on alternate days. Sullivan figured he received $12,000-$ 15,000 in § 24 fees in the course of a year.
The defendant charges Sullivan with a disqualifying conflict of interest because, in issuing a warrant, he creates a possibility of receiving $15 for bail duty. But his neutrality is
*33
hardly compromised in the sense of
Connally
v.
Georgia,
2.
Trial: contents of the nine bags.
The defendant makes what he has called a “technical” argument that the Commonwealth failed in the proof needed to establish that a sufficient number of the bags contained cocaine to aggregate a weight of the total contents of those bags in excess of 28 grams.
9
The respective positions of the defendant and the Commonwealth (each advanced with the help of an expert) may be summarized thus. Defendant: Only by “infrared” spectroscopy could it be proved that a sample contained cocaine. “Ultraviolet” spectroscopy would show only the concentration of a given compound in a sample. Samples from only five bags were subjected to infrared examination, all with positive results. Commonwealth: Where numerous suspected bags or other units are received for official analysis, all with substances evidently alike — as to color, consistency, packaging, smell, etc. — it is not necessary, and would be superfluous, to subject each bag to the infrared and ultraviolet tests. It is enough to make representative tests, here five infrareds and four ultraviolets; and this has been the practice. It was on this basis that the State police laboratory issued a certificate covering the nine bags; and, under the statute, G. L. c. 111, § 13, the certified statement about the contents must be accepted as prima facie evidence running through the case. See
Commonwealth
v.
Harvard,
The defendant complains that, of the four worksheets of the laboratory analyst which were to be received from the Commonwealth by way of discovery, only three were produced; the fourth, related to the nine bags, was lost. The loss is regrettable, but there was nothing intentional about it. Compare
Commonwealth
v.
Light,
Judgment affirmed.
Notes
Guns were also found and surrendered to the police.
To be read hereafter as “he/she” as in the text of the affidavit.
The affidavit says “they” but we take it that “he/she” was intended.
In fact, these averments do not stand alone. There is corroboration through Curtis’s surveillance. See
Commonwealth
v.
Parapar,
The court in
Rojas
suggested that veracity could be established where more details were provided about the circumstances of an arrest, e.g., what role the informant played in obtaining the arrest; whether the informant had been proved correct in his statement of a particular fact. See
Whether or not narcotics convictions. See
Commonwealth
v.
Vynorius,
As to the possible occasions on which a defendant may attack such averments of an affidavit and demand a hearing about their truth, see
Commonwealth
v.
Abdelnour,
As stated in
Quinn
v.
State Ethics Comm'n,
See G. L. c. 94C, § 32E(b)(1), as in effect prior to St. 1988, c. 124.
